20,789 research outputs found
Microscopic Restoration of Proton-Neutron Mixed Symmetry in Weakly Collective Nuclei
Starting from the microscopic low-momentum nucleon-nucleon interaction V{low
k}, we present the first systematic shell model study of magnetic moments and
magnetic dipole transition strengths of the basic low-energy one-quadrupole
phonon excitations in nearly-spherical nuclei. Studying in particular the
even-even N=52 isotones from 92Zr to 100Cd, we find the predicted evolution of
the predominantly proton-neutron non-symmetric state reveals a restoration of
collective proton-neutron mixed-symmetry structure near mid-shell. This
provides the first explanation for the existence of pronounced collective
mixed-symmetry structures in weakly-collective nuclei.Comment: 5 Pages, 3 figure
Family of Hermitian Low-Momentum Nucleon Interactions with Phase Shift Equivalence
Using a Schmidt orthogonalization transformation, a family of Hermitian
low-momentum NN interactions is derived from the non-Hermitian Lee-Suzuki (LS)
low-momentum NN interaction. As special cases, our transformation reproduces
the Hermitian interactions for Okubo and Andreozzi. Aside from their common
preservation of the deuteron binding energy, these Hermitian interactions are
shown to be phase shift equivalent, all preserving the empirical phase shifts
up to decimation scale Lambda. Employing a solvable matrix model, the Hermitian
interactions given by different orthogonalization transformations are studied;
the interactions can be very different from each other particularly when there
is a strong intruder state influence. However, because the parent LS
low-momentum NN interaction is only slightly non-Hermitian, the Hermitian
low-momentum nucleon interactions given by our transformations, including the
Okubo and Andreozzi ones, are all rather similar to each other. Shell model
matrix elements given by the LS and several Hermitian low-momentum interactions
are compared.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figure
Pairing and realistic shell-model interactions
This paper starts with a brief historical overview of pairing in nuclei,
which fulfills the purpose of properly framing the main subject. This concerns
the pairing properties of a realistic shell-model effective interaction which
has proved very successful in describing nuclei around doubly magic 132Sn. We
focus attention on the two nuclei 134Te and 134Sn with two valence protons and
neutrons, respectively. Our study brings out the key role of one particle-one
hole excitations in producing a significant difference between proton and
neutron pairing in this region
Model Calculation of Effective Three-Body Forces
We propose a scheme for extracting an effective three-body interaction
originating from a two-nucleon interaction. This is based on the Q-box method
of Kuo and collaborators, where folded diagrams are obtained by differentiating
a sum of non-folded diagrams with respect to the starting energy. To gain
insight we have studied several examples using the Lipkin model where the
perturbative approach can be compared with exact results. Numerically the
three-body interactions can be significant and in a matrix example good
accuracy was not obtained simultaneously for both eigenvalues with two-body
interactions alone.Comment: 9 pages, Revtex4, 7 figs, submitted to PR
Flavor Mixing and the Permutation Symmetry among Generations
In the standard model, the permutation symmetry among the three generations
of fundamental fermions is usually regarded to be broken by the Higgs
couplings. It is found that the symmetry is restored if we include the mass
matrix parameters as physical variables which transform appropriately under the
symmetry operation. Known relations between these variables, such as the
renormalization group equations, as well as formulas for neutrino oscillations
(in vacuum and in matter), are shown to be covariant tensor equations under the
permutation symmetry group.Comment: 12 page
Rephasing invariance and neutrino mixing
A rephasing invariant parametrization is introduced for three flavor neutrino
mixing. For neutrino propagation in matter, these parameters are shown to obey
evolution equations as functions of the induced neutrino mass. These equations
are found to preserve (approximately) some characteristic features of the
mixing matrix, resulting in solutions which exhibit striking patterns as the
induced mass varies. The approximate solutions are compared to numerical
integrations and found to be quite accurate.Comment: 18 pages, 6 figure
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